This week has been a real treat for all of New England. We’ll keep it rolling into Friday, but there are chinks in the armor.
Onshore breezes slowly increase the humidity, and with the longer nights, we have plenty of reasons to believe …
Your Hometown Radio
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This week has been a real treat for all of New England. We’ll keep it rolling into Friday, but there are chinks in the armor.
Onshore breezes slowly increase the humidity, and with the longer nights, we have plenty of reasons to believe …
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Harvard is ranked the worst school for free speech: ‘Abysmal’ climate; How do other Massachusetts colleges rank?
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Residents of a condemned high-rise apartment building in Revere, Massachusetts, will soon need to move out.
Eugene Pavlukhin lives in one of the 40 occupied units inside the Water’s Edge apartment building.
“It’s very frustrating, and to be honest with you, very depressing,” said Pavlukhin. “At this point, I don’t know what I’m going to do.”
All of the tenants are facing a deadline of 5 p.m. Friday to move out.
Attorneys for the tenants, the city and the building’s owners were in court Wednesday hammering out next steps.
Judge Irene Bagdoian said the tenants should be given at least until Friday, even though the city has been pushing for the condemnation order to take effect.
City officials condemned the building last week, saying the fire protection system doesn’t work and numerous code violations haven’t been fixed for years by the building’s owner.
“I don’t want these people wandering the streets and showing up at your mayor’s house saying ‘house me,’” said Bagdoian. “These folks are the unwitting innocents in what’s a really spectacular tug of war between the city and Water’s Edge.”
The building owners are responsible for finding alternatives for the tenants for the duration of their leases — some could go to the company’s apartment building down the street, while others go to a hotel with kitchen facilities.
“They want to remain in the area,” said attorney Andrew Burger, who represents the tenants. “They love it here, they do not want to leave, but they can’t remain in a building with unsafe conditions.”
Many tenants have said they want to stay put, and they can’t afford to live elsewhere.
“I have nowhere to go,” said Pavlukhin.
All sides will be back in court Friday morning.
The judge wants there to be a plan in place for all of the tenants as to how they’ll be housed before they have to move out.
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After an injured teenager said he was beaten up by fellow students in Gloucester, Massachusetts, because he’s transgender, a lawyer giving legal counsel to the teenagers being accused is sharing their own narrative of the story.
Jayden T…
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A Massachusetts mother says her son, who has autism, ended up at an unregulated school in New York due to an error by education officials.
Roberta Biscan of Wilmington says the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education wro…
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Steward Health Care’s CEO won’t be at a congressional hearing next week despite being subpoenaed, as his attorney says his testimony would be “wholly inappropriate” amid bankruptcy proceedings.
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